5SB We attach this tag to every Dag of 'tatta p!ioAnMof the smoker. Circulation Large. Rates Reasonable Returns Remieratii PLATTSWiOUTH HERALD Is a WeeMy qid speciql qltje qs qi qd e:ttisi:qg medium t ptlt county. BUSINESS W. Jj -4. f 601 Cor Fifth ClLATTSMOUTH PL Everything to Furnish Your House. AT . - I. PEARLMAN'S . . . GREAT MODERN HOUSE FURNISHING EMPORIUM. Having purchased the J. V. We ckbach store room on south Main street where I am now located can 6ell goods cheap er than the cheapest haying just put in the largest stock of new goods ever brought to the city. Gasoline stoves and furniture of all kinds sold on the installment plan. I. PEARLMAN. N THE POSITIVE CURE. I r-y BHOTHZRS. M Warren SX-. 'Kew York. Price 60 eta. I The Tariff V Has not raised tha price on Blackwell's Bull Durham Smoking Tobacco. There are many other brands, each represented by some inter ested person to be "just as good as the Bull Durham." They are not; but like all counterfeits, they each lack the peculiar and attractive qualities of the genuine m.ArirwRn:s " DURHAM TOBACCO CO. DURHAM, N. C PtlMicatioiq of MANAGER. and Vine St. - NEBRASKA I rXAIfULRVf E3e s . Get a more on your secretions by taking "Ralrena for your Mood." Cures the worst Skin and Miotic DiworderH. Guaranteed by O. 1! Snyder and lirown t& lJnrr'tt. La Crippe. No healthy p-r.-on iievd fear an (laneroiH -.ot.s'ijii-iu--s from s . attack of la M"ri i i ' properl; treated. It is mi tt 1 1 the fa:n as Mevere cold aiul reipiires jm cii-H the same treat incut. Winaiii m i- ly at home and take Chamberlain Cough Reiiifdy as ili i-vt-tt fur a vere colcl and a p:iijt iiinl con. plete recov ry i ; ;ir.- to follow This remedy al.-o cmiuteraCtH an; tendency ot la grippe to ret id t i pneumonia. Anions the mam thousands wkio have used it during the epidemics of the past two year. we have yet to learn of a singlt case that has not recovered or tha' has resulted in pneumonia. and ."() cent bottles for sale by F. i Fricke & Co. La rlppe Successfully Treated "I have just recovered from a sec ond attack of the grip this year," sayn Mr. Jas. O. Jones, publisher of the leader, Mexica Texa.s. "In the latter case I used ChatnberlainV Couli remedy, and I thiiiK with considerable success, only being in bed a little over two days, against ten days for the lirst atttick. The second attack, I am ratslied. would have been equally as bad as the first but for the use of this remedy, as I had to go to bed in about six hours after being struck with it, while in the first case I was able to atiend to business about two days before getting down. 59 cent bot tles fcr sale b F. G. Fricke Sc Co. The population of Platumouth Is about 10,000, add we would say at least neo-half are troubled with some effection on the throat and lungs, as those complaints are, ac cording to staaistica, more numer ous than others. We would advise all our readers not to neglect the opportunity to call on their drug gist and get a bottle of Kemp's Bal sam for the throat and lungs. Trial size free. LargeBottle 50c- and $1. Sold by all druggist. 4i Mothers Friend" HIKES CllftD BIRTH EAST. Colrln,! Dee. 8, 1886. My wife used XOTEXB'8 TKTKITO bfox- her third confinement, and says aha would not be without it for hundred of dollars. SOCK XELXA Sant by rxin uii 00 receipt of price. $IJS0 yet bot tle. Book" To Mothen" mailed free. BmAonmLD regulator co4 reaiuinuiMWMMta, ATLJUTTA, fir tire Llqior Hah it, Positively Curar ot Aouiaiirtnijo m. HAiitr mlbei tpieint. It can be given In a cm ot coffee or tea. or In ar ticles el ooa. without the knowledge of the per 1011 taking it; it ia absolutely h armless and will effect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderate drlnkeror an alcoholic wreck, it NEVER FAILS, We GUARANTEE a complete cure in e3ry instance. 43 page book FREE. Addressin confidence, ... ViLDEll SPECIFIC CO.. la&Bnoi tU CtaclooatLO Ch&inberlain's Eye SSda Ointment. A certain care f or Chronic Sore Eyw Tetter, Salt Rheum, Scald Bead, Ok Chronic Sores, Fever Sores, Eciema, Itch,' Prairie Scratches, - Sore Nipple and Piles. It is cooling and soothing. Hundreds of cases have been cured by It after all other treatment had failed, lit Is put up in 25 and 50 cent boxes. BO LINC WATER OR MILK. .'- i . 1 . . . PPS'S GRATEUL COMFORTING COCOA Labeled 1-2 lb Tins Only. NESBaADBOIBISCURED by Pack '1 larMkl Tabular Mmr Cask Un. Whanwn kwd. Confortabl. Sucmaftilwhvreal lr.iwdlti fnlwhmal Irrawdlnfail. Sold by T. Stem, only, CDCC 853 Bnadwar, lex Vara. Writ for bank of proof. I Ilka. PTINnRL$i'5orKan9 $48. Want acrts. catl'jnie lliUiULrfree. Address Dan'l Fiieatty.wasli ington .N. J. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Chan and beautifies the hair. Promote a )axtt:taut growth. Kevrer Tails to Keator Gray Hair to its Youthful Color. Cure vraip diifwn a hair tailing. JOf.aad jl.Wat Drngrto " I e xrker j Ginger Tonic. It cure the worn Cough, Venk i,nr ?r. Drbilirr, Indigestion, Fain, Take in time 90 eta. KINDSRCORNS.. The only nr core for Com. Siup aUiHuo. Cc at Urugfuts. or 1LLSCOX CO., Ji. Y. How Lost I How Regained! kc::;thyseif. Or SELF-PRESERVATION. A new and only Gold Medal PRIZE ESSAY on NERVOUS and PHYSICAL ' DEBILITY, ERRORS of YOUTH. EIHAtSTED VITALITY, PRE MATURE DECLINE, and all DISEASES and WEAKNESSES otHAK. 800 pages, doth. Ut; 186 inTalaabia preecnptiofia. OnJy $1.00 j mail, doable sealed. DeacriptiTe Prospect ca witn enaoriemonia ;SFREE! now? of the Press and volant testimonial of the cm - Consultation in person or by mail. Expert treat ment. INVIOLABLE SECRECY and CER TAIN CURE. Addiw Dr. W. H. Parker, or The Peabody Medical Institute, No. 4 Bulfiuch St.. Boston, Mass. The Peabody Medical Institute has many imi tators, but no eqnal. Herald. The Science of Life, or Strlf-Preservation, Is a treasure more valuable tban pold. Head It now, everv WEAK and NERVOUS man, and learn to be STRONG . Mrdicul Htrit't. (Coji riuhted-' fflruntenness 13 r 1 fOFj jjjFEl 7 ) Han A not Kl art. A desperate fight betv eer. a man awl a ttbark occurred recen ly it Manulfiui harbor. Mr. Henry Ja.ols..n, who is employed at the North Iantl:au Ilrti-N as beacon light keeper, was out in his boat about tsix miles down the harbor when it was struck by a squall au l swamped aud the occupant left in the water. Jacobsqn dived and indeavored to relieve the ballast, but ithout suc cess. He then grasped an oa , and being a good swimmer struck ott for !and: but as a strong tide was running he was Bwept down the harbor a distance of three miles. At that poii t he was at tacked by a large shark, which grabbed at his hand. He protected himself, how ever, with the oar, which he tried to ram down the shark's throat. The fish then made a circle around him, and renewed the attack. By this time, however, Jacobson had his sheath knife drawn, and desperately stabbed the shark, ripping its side open, so that the water became red with blood. A further attack was made, when Jacob son again stabbed the monster near the tail, and it swam away. At that time a boat came in sight, and Jacobson. ex hausted, was hauled into the boat, hay ing been in the water two hours and thirty minutes. New Zealand Uerald. Electricity from CoaL A French chemist, who has been giv ing considerable attention to the problem ; of heating and lighting from a single ! annrr.A. Vinj rievinrul a nwl stove, which in appearance resembles an ordinary heating stove. It is so arranged inter nally that the waste of heat is utilized for the generation of electricity. This is secured by a number of rectangular boxes of sheet iron, containing the nec essary metallic elements for furnishing the current. These elements are in sulated by asbestos, and the cooling is effected partly by the shape in which the metallic alloys are cast and partly by a circulation of air. The current obtained is not great in amount, but the result of - this attempt seems to be favorable. Accumulators are used for storing up the electricity, and as the heating is required for a much longer period than for lighting, the elec trical energy, which would be lost dur ing the hours of daylight, is saved. A point of considerable moment is that the heat utilized in this way is waste heat, so that any portion that can be recov ered in the form of electricity is so much gain. Philadelphia Record. The Brala Jar of the Military Step. Dr. Colin,' regimental physician in the French army, has published the results of his investigations into the effects of regular marching in disciplined bodies upon soldiers. The regularity of the step causes the indefinite repetition of a hock of the bones and brain,' infinitely more deleterious than an irregular walk, and to this regular repetition of the shock to the same parts of the body are due the peculiar aches, pains and illness es of the troops. In a one day march, he says, this shock is repeated 40,000 times, and often the strongest men, who can walk the same distance without dimculty when not in line,' succumb to the strain in two or three days. " Dr. Colin's preventive is I koal Vi aa hanri t.rioA n.t Vii inntn.nrA in th French infantry, he says, and the result has been found to be a great relief to the soldiers. The experiments with the j rubber heel are still in progress. Medi cal Record. A Mule Incident. A characteristic incident occurred yesterday afternoon in connection with Isaac Cochran's sale of horses at the Eagle' hotel. A pair of mules were brought out, hitched to a wagon ami ! driven by Harry Cochran. This is a 1 - - . fine pair of mules, said Auctioneer Mc Farlan. "Just drive them up the street to let the people see how nicely they can travel." After going a short distance they were no longer of one mind, but one v. auted to go one way and one th other. In their efforts to part company they nearly ran into a colored man, who, trying to get away, fell into the water trough. Then they displayed their speed by . running off out East Gay street, throwing their driver, Harry Cochran, out and badly breaking the wagon. They were caught out near the nurseries. The mules were not sold that day. West Chester (Pa.) News. A Belle Marries a Brave. Honey C. Holt, a full blood Winne bago Indian, has just been married to Miss Maud C. Williams, of New Boston, Ills. The couple met 'and loved while he was traveling with a number of his tribe advertising a patent medicine. He is not a bad looking young man, a as a magnificent physique and is fairly well educated. The bride is a very pretty young lady, and was quite a belle in her neighborhood. She could have selected a husband from among a dozen thrifty young farmers, but preferred to become the wife of the red man, who, she says, has not a single bad habit. The couple left to join the band at Abington, Ills. Cor. Chicago Times. Lobster Story from Maine. Lobsters are going into the freak busi ness quite largely this winter. " An East- port fisherman secured a white one the other day and now a man at Peak's island has found an even greater curiosity a veritable blue lobster. It is a beautiful specimen of the crnn tacean, and the bright cerulean has ex tended even to the ends of its tong feelers. The lobsters have evidently been at tending a fancy dress party. Bangor (Me.) Commercial. It is - said that many of the German colonists on the Volga river who are sufferers from the Russian famine, in order to 6are fuel, have dug holes in the I ground, subterranean shelters in which j they burrow like foxes. There is a lad in Whitingham, Vt., eighteen years old, who is (J feet -10 inches tall and still gro white. lie weighj 200 pounds. Fireproof Material. At the Berlin exhibition of means and ntrivanct-n for the prevention of acci- ! dents in industries and otherwise, prizt-s were awarded for the following proc esses for tin-proofing, resj)ectively dimin ishing the combustibility of tissues, cur tain materials and theatrical scenery: For light tissues, oixteen pounds ammo mum sulphates, five pounds ammonium carbonate, four pounds borax, six pound:" boric acid, four pounds starch, or on" pound dextrine, or one pound gelatine aud twenty-five gallons water, mixed to gether, heated to B0 degs. Fahrenheit, and the material impregnated with the mixture, centrifugated and dried, and then ironed as usual. One quart of the mixture, costing about three or four cents, is enough to impregnate fifteen yards of material. For curtain materials, theatrical deco rations, wood and furniture thirty pounds ammonium chloride are mixed with so much floated chalk as to give the mass consistency. It is then heated to 125 to 150 degs. Fahrenheit, and the material given one or two coats of it by means of a brush. A pound of it, cost ing about eight-tenths of a cent, is suffi cient to cover five square rods. Berlin' Letter. A Terrible Thins a Battle. The house committee on naval affairs for some days has had under considera tion a bill providing for the addition to the navy of a novel craft. The feature of the design is found in an enormous submarine gun carried at the bow below the water line. The pro jectors feel that they have now a prac ticable means at hand to drive an enor mous ehell loaded with an explosive charge of gunpowder or gun cotton into the hull of any ironclad afloat and ex plode it in the very vitals of the ship. According to the design submitted to the committee and explained by Gen eral Berdan, a hydraulic buffer projects from the bow of the vessel. This is so adjusted that it will stop the boat a dis tance of eight feet from the enemy's ship without injury to the boat. At this short range the buffer automatically dis charges the submarine gun directly at the hull of the ship, and lodges within it a shell carrying a bursting charge oi 450 pounds of powder, sufficient to blow down every bulkhead in the ship and wreck the bottom. Cincinnati Com mercial Gazette. Glad to Get Rid of Him. A few days ago Governor Buchanan was called upon to exercise executive clemency in a very peculiar case. The person concerned was a man held in jail at Jackson till he should produce a $2(0 fine. He had been there over a year without showing any signs of liquidating with the commonwealth, and it is prob able he would have remained a prisonei for the next fifty years if payment had been waited for.- The county, court, recognizing him as an incubus to the amount of forty cents a day, passed a resolution asking the governor "for the Lord's sake" to forgive that little $2UU and let the man get out and earn his own living. The trial judge and the attorney general and the members of the jury all appeared on the petition Bent up in ac cordance with the resolution, but not a single friend of the prisoner was among the signers. Nashville American. Made Her Left Handed by a Blow. Three years ago a young lady of Fall River, Mass., was hit upon the left side of her head by a falling sign as she was walking along a street in Boston. This was followed by brain fever. After some weeks she was as well in mind and body as ever, but from a right handed person she had become so left handed that she could neither cut, sew nor write with her right hand, but found it easy to do all these things with her left. Her right hand was just about as useful as her left had been before she was hurt. What is strange is that; with so recent a change -in the use of her hands, she never makes an awkward motion and is as graceful in the use of her left hand as if she had been born left handed. Bos ton Post. A Greedy Mountain Lion's Fate. Dr. French, a seventy-year-old resi dent of Alamo, killed a mountain lion one day last week at the Tule ranch in the pineries. The lion had crawled into a pig pen through a small hole, and after feasting on two shoats was too big to get out through the hole. Thus he was an easy prey to the doctor, who gave him a hypodermic injection of birdshot in order to see him perform. He per formed to the entire satisfaction of his tormentor. The doctor administered a 44-caliber pill, which put him to sleep. The animal had immense claws, and measured six feet from tip to tip. ban Diego Sun. A Great Famine Predicted. A prophet in Athens, Ga., predicts that the crop yield this year throughout this country will be the largest ever known, but that beginning with 1893, and for two years thereafter, there will be the greatest famine the world has ever known. During that time rain shall cease to -fall, and the streams of the country will all dry np, vegetation will no longer exist, and all animals will surely die. At the beginning of the famine the land will be infested with all sorts of vermin, and the living will suf fer untold tortures. An Australian agricultural paper makes note of an immense increase in the number of sheep in Australia in the last two or three years, and of the enor mous development of the grazing capa bilities of the country. The estimated number of sheep in Australia in J892 is 60,000.000. against 31,000,000 in 1884. - The number of monarchies in Europe has increased by one during the past year, the duchy of Luxembourg having become a sovereign state by the death of the queen of Holland. A gold brick was recently shipped to San FrancL-co from Yuma, Cal., the value of which was estimated at between $80,000 aud fOO.COO. It weighed a little 1 over pounds. :to siixppkks. : r Uutter, Kkk, Clieene, i Id Game,, Poultry, Meat, Ajj1ch, Potatom Green and Dried I'Yuitr, Vegetable" Cider, UeatiH, Wool, Hidcri, Tallow Sheep PeltH, Purn, Skin, Tobacco, Grain, Flour; Hay, Hecwwax, Feath ers, Ginning-, Uroomoorti, and Hop. M. K. It AI.LA R I) (if-n. Coin, Merchant and Klitpi-r, 217 Market Street - Kt. I-oul. Ho. WANTKIl Asrnt, ynr ucxuulntcd with Fann ers and tShlt'tr. TIMOTHY CLARK: DEALER IX COAL WOOD oTKRMS CASIIo rds and Office 404 Houth Third Street. Telephone 18. I 1ATTSMOUTH, N ERR AS 5 K. KKYNOLDS, KeglHtered 1'hynlclau and I'liarmaoltt Special attention piven to Office Practice. Rock Bluffs . Nbb. IEALIB IX STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES GLASS AND QUE ENS WARE. Patronage of the Pablic Solicited. Nortfe Sixth Street, Plattswaoutlk Lumber Yard THE OLD RELIABLE. II. A. WATERMAN & Shingles, Lath, Sash, Doors, Blinds Can Bapply everw demand of the city. Call and get termi. Fourth rtreet in rear of opera house. For Atchinson, St. Joeeph, Leaven worth, Kansas City, St. Louie, and all points ntli, eaet south or west. Tick ets sold and bajj-g-age checked to any point in the United States or Canada. For INFORMATION AS TO RATES AND ROUTES Call at Depot or address H, C. Towxsexd, G. P. A. St. Louis, Mo. J. C. PHILLIPPI, A. G. P. A. Omaha. H. D. APGAR. Aet., Plattsmoath. Telephone, 77. English Spavin Liniment removes all hard eoft or calloused lumps and blemishes from horses, blood spavins , curbs eplints, Sweeney, ring bone, stiflee, sprains all : swoi len throats, coughs etc.. Save 50 cent by use of one bottle. "Warrant ed the most wonderful blemish cure ever known. Sold by V. G. Fricke & Co druggists Plattemouth Shiloh's catarrh remedy a posi itive cure Catarrh, Diphtheria and Canker mouth. For f-ale by F. G. Fricke 5c Co F LUMBER